Read Shadow Knight's Mate Online

Authors: Jay Brandon

Shadow Knight's Mate (44 page)

He was crying though he didn't know it. Crying and furious. All this brilliance destroyed. Again he heard Bruno's words.
I have so many back-up plans you couldn't count them.
He had been intent on destroying the Circle any way he could. If humiliation didn't work, he would throw away subtlety and use bombs. He had had enough technology left for one huge strike.

Jack slammed his fists down and screamed out over that canyon. “NOOOOOO!!!” Echoes captured the cry and made it their own. Jack put his forehead down on the ground and wept uncontrollably.

That was when the man and woman dressed in black appeared behind him. They must have been in the underground parking area all along. For FBI agents, they showed amazing empathy and were surprisingly gentle. “We've been hoping one of you was left,” the man said.

“You'll have to come with us, sir,” the woman added.

Jack let them lift him up and escort him away.

Exit Interview

“And that was the end,” Jack said. He had just brought his interrogator up to date, as of five days ago when he'd been captured, or arrested, or whatever he was.

“That's everything?” she said. Her voice didn't hold the sympathy of the agents who'd arrested him. She sat there as if she'd been hoping the tale had a bigger finish, and he had disappointed her. This was an interrogation technique, he knew, but it still irritated him. He had just told her that his world had come to an end and the real world was going to be a much more dismal place as a result, and she acted bored. He thought she was overplaying her role.

In fact, that wasn't quite everything. He hadn't told her about Rachel, or Stevie, in fact hadn't named any names at all, just given a broad outline. He was prepared to take personal details to his grave, or into lifelong prison.

In a more cheerful voice he said, “Nothing else except to add that everything I've said is a lie. I was just hiking through the desert when those agents grabbed me and I made up a story to keep my brain occupied.”

The woman didn't smile. She wrote three symbols on her pad. Jack waited a moment, feeling the vibrations of her fingers tapping out another message, then answered her on the paper. After he did she wrote a K with a slash through it. Jack nodded.

They were sitting staring at each other when the door slid noiselessly to the side and a woman in a wheelchair rolled into the room. The door closed behind her. The woman pointed a small control in her hand at the room's video camera and clicked.

Jack jumped to his feet. The woman in the wheelchair looked at him impassively. “We never talk,” she said. “Never. Not under any circumstances. We never reveal ourselves to outsiders. Never for any reason. Isn't that the first thing you were taught?”

“Mrs. Leaphorn!”

She nodded, her expression bored at his obviousness.

“I thought you were dead,” Jack said happily.

“Even then we don't talk.” Then she relented and gave him a little. “I wasn't arrested, just isolated. After half a century in government service, I have a reputation as a consultant. During the crisis, our government in its wisdom wanted me consulting. And the security here makes Langley look like an outdoor playground. I couldn't get word to anyone. Luckily, I did have enough pull to have you brought here.”

“But not to stop—”

Gladys Leaphorn shook her had minutely. Apparently she didn't trust that she had turned off all the surveillance in this room.

Jack looked at the interviewer. The Chair had already said too much in front of a civilian. Looking at the woman in the chair opposite him, Jack said, “Go Hornets?”

The woman nodded.

“Damn.” He turned his attention back to Gladys. “But people got away.”

She gave him another tiny nod.

“So what Bruno told me about Craig Mortenson—?”

“That, sadly, was true. Craig is dead. I think.”

“You think?”

Gladys wore a little frown, the way she did when confronted with something inexplicable. For an old Indian shaman, she had absolutely no supernatural beliefs. “Alicia says he's not dead. Oh, his body is certainly deceased, we've confirmed that. But Alicia escaped, as you surmised. And after she dispatched his murderers, she would not leave without her husband. She says she didn't. Alicia says she caught Craig's dying breath, and took his mind into her own. No one ever understood their symbiosis. Now it's complete. She says Craig was tired of his body anyway, and is quite happy in hers.”

Jack was staring at her. Gladys shrugged irritably. “You should hear her talk to herself. But it's a harmless psychosis, and makes her happy.”

In a toneless voice, Jack said, “Alicia told me where the
conference was going to be. That college in Virginia. That's how I was able to set up there before anyone else.”

“How could she have known that?”

“She said she and Craig figured it out.”

They both stared into space. Then the Chair shook her head and her eyes drilled into Jack again. “But none of this excuses what you've just done, Jack. You can't be trusted.”

Jack stood perfectly still. He wondered if she was going to arrange his death. That's probably what it would have to be. Mere lifelong incarceration wouldn't keep him from talking. She had the power to do it any number of ways.

He could tell from Gladys' expression that she hated what she had to do. “I kept listening for some sign that you knew, that you were just leading us on, knowing we were the ones interrogating you. But I never did.”

The woman in the chair sat up straight. She had begun taking off her makeup, removing implants from inside her mouth. Her face slimmed down. She took off the lifeless wig, shook out her hair, which was much shorter than the last time he'd seen it, but the same light brown. She removed contact lenses and her eyes were their old piercing blue. Arden stood up and unselfconsciously reached up under her dress, pulling out the padding. Jack just watched her.

“He did know, though,” she said matter-of-factly.

“What?” Her grandmother's head snapped toward her.

“He was dropping clues all along, Granny. Didn't you catch any of them?”

“When?”

“Oh, please. That part about making love to me. The detail.” She rolled her eyes. “Implying that I wasn't very good at it. Please. That was to goad me out of my role.”

Gladys was thinking hard. “No. You're making excuses for him now.”

Arden said nonchalantly, “Plus he's been playing me the chess match I won against the computer when I was in school in Grenoble. Move for move.”

Gladys sat there, only her eyes moving. Obviously she'd been seeing the scribbles on the pads and hadn't bothered interpreting them. Now she ran back in her memory all those moves of the last three hours. “My God, you're right.”

Arden said, “It is only the deep respect in which I hold you that prevents my saying, ‘Duh.'”

Jack stood at ease, letting the women work it out. Gladys Leaphorn obviously hadn't been persuaded. “You told him,” she accused her granddaughter. “You gave him some kind of signals. You winked at him.”

“I did not! Run the tape.”

“I'm sure you would have it altered somehow by the time we played it back. But it doesn't matter. He has proven he can't be trusted.”

Jack finally stepped in. “What are you going to do then, Granny? Mind-wipe me?”

Gladys sounded disgusted. “I doubt it would take in your case. You would be left a drooling idiot roaming the streets babbling insanities. Questions would be asked. No, Jack. You are out.” She shot a look at her granddaughter. “Both of you. You deserve each other. You will never again be privy to our councils. The Circle is dead anyway. You are the last remnants. We are disbanded.”

Her eyelid flickered, so swiftly it could never be caught on videotape.

Jack hung his head. He put up a little argument, but Gladys Leaphorn was adamant.

Arden said, “I guess I have to re-frump.”

“Put it on,” her grandmother said. “When you look like that you become one of the women men don't see.”

“Really?”

“Just do it.”

Arden reconfigured her disguise, lifting her skirt to put the padding back on. Jack watched her without pretending to do otherwise. She sighed as she reinserted the contacts and cheek pads. Then the three of them left the interrogation room. No agents waited outside. Gladys escorted them out of the secured
area, flashing her badge a few times—sure enough, the men glanced at Arden then she seemed to become invisible to them— to a waiting car that had no driver. “Go,” Gladys said, and turned and rolled back into the building without ceremony.

Jack drove. In a few miles they came to a small town, and abandoned the car. They walked toward a tiny train station. If there wasn't a train due soon, Arden would get a car for them.

She transformed herself back into Arden again. This time Jack watched appreciatively as she reached under her dress and pulled out the padding.

“Thanks for the signals,” he said as they started walking again.

“Thanks for entertaining me with that BS about me being lousy in the sack.”

He turned and looked at her in surprise. “Such language from a nice schoolgirl. I have never used such a crude expression in my life.”

“But it's what you meant.”

“No, I didn't.” He put his arm around her. “I think you have talent. And enthusiasm, which—”

“Shut up.”

“All you need is—”

“Practice,” they said together, then Arden added, “Then let's hurry up and get to a large population center so I can—”

“Oh, right. As if anyone could—”

“There would be—”

He laughed. She jabbed him in the ribs with her elbow. They were both laughing. By the time they got to the train station they were interrupting each other's sentences after one or two words. It sounded as if they were talking in code.

— THE END —

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

J
ay Brandon
is a successful attorney and a prolific, award-winning mystery novelist. He holds a Master's Degree in writing from Johns Hopkins University and a law degree from the University of Texas. Except for
The Real History,
all of Brandon's novels are set in San Antonio and South Texas. His extensive experience as an attorney with the District Attorney's office in Bexar County and with the Fourth Court of Appeals has provided him with plenty of insights into the workings of the legal system, and how what is “accepted history” is often a long way from the “real history.” A native Texan, Brandon lives in San Antonio, Texas.

W
ings Press
was founded in 1975 by Joanie Whitebird and Joseph F. Lomax, both deceased, as “an informal association of artists and cultural mythologists dedicated to the preservation of the literature of the nation of Texas.” Publisher, editor and designer since 1995, Bryce Milligan is honored to carry on and expand that mission to include the finest in American writing—meaning all of the Americas, without commercial considerations clouding the decision to publish or not to publish.

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